Drop an NBK, KFH, Boubyan, Burgan, Gulf Bank, or Ahli United PDF. Every fils stays intact — three decimal places, KNet labels, and Arabic merchants preserved.
KWD uses three decimal places — 1 dinar equals 1000 fils. A line that reads '125.500' on your statement means KWD 125.500, not KWD 1,255.00. Most generic PDF-to-Excel tools assume two decimals and silently round the third, which corrupts every running balance from that row down. We parse three decimals as three decimals. Your fils precision survives the conversion.
As the world's highest-valued currency (roughly 3.25 USD per dinar), KWD amounts look small relative to USD or AED equivalents. A KWD 1,000 salary represents over USD 3,250. We don't auto-convert — your statement stays in dinars and fils. If you need a USD view for a remittance reconciliation, export and add a column; we won't apply a rate that's out of date by the time you open the file.
We've tested KWD PDFs from National Bank of Kuwait (NBK), Kuwait Finance House (KFH), Boubyan Bank, Burgan Bank, Gulf Bank, and Ahli United Bank Kuwait. Each has its own PDF layout — NBK uses a five-column statement with separate fils and dinar columns on older PDFs, KFH groups Islamic finance entries on a footnote page, Boubyan uses dual Arabic-English headers. We handle each without you telling us which bank issued the file.
KWD's peg to an undisclosed currency basket (since May 2007) means the USD equivalent fluctuates within roughly ±2%. Unlike SAR or AED, you can't reverse-derive an exact USD amount from your KWD statement — and we don't try. The output is in KWD only, with the original international currency shown alongside for international card spend, exactly as your bank printed it.
Kuwaiti nationals filing for PIFSS pension records, expat workers reconciling KWD salary against home-country remittances, accountants preparing Kuwaiti corporate tax (now phased in for multinationals) filings, finance teams at Kuwaiti family offices, and freelancers building income proof for visa or residency renewal.
Output is Excel-ready: dates in the leftmost column, description in Arabic and English columns side by side, debit, credit, and balance as numeric columns formatted to three decimals. The cells are typed as numbers, not text, so your SUM and SUBTOTAL formulas work without manual conversion.
Pegged to an undisclosed currency basket since May 2007 (previously USD-pegged). KWD is the world's highest-valued currency by exchange rate, currently around 3.25 USD per dinar. Three decimal places (fils) are used.
Will the three decimal places stay accurate?
Yes. KWD's fils precision (three decimals) is preserved in the Excel output as numeric values, not strings. A '125.500' line stays 125.500. Tools that assume two-decimal currency silently round the third digit and break the running balance — we don't.
Do you handle Islamic bank statements from KFH and Boubyan?
Yes. Murabaha, Wakala, and Tawarruq entries are extracted with their Arabic labels intact. We don't relabel them as 'interest' or merge them with conventional finance rows.
Will KNet point-of-sale transactions show up correctly?
Yes. KNet POS transactions appear as their own rows with the merchant name and terminal ID where the bank prints them. We don't merge multiple KNet entries into a single daily summary.
Can I convert a multi-year KWD statement?
Yes. Multi-year statements work the same way. KWD's basket peg means USD-equivalent values across years aren't strictly comparable — but the dinar amounts in your statement stay accurate as-is for KWD-denominated analysis.
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